Micro-wire electrodes with dummy micro-dots

ABSTRACT

A micro-wire multi-electrode structure having an area of substantially uniform optical density includes a plurality of spatially separated patterned electrodes in an electrode layer in the area. Each electrode includes a plurality of patterned conductive electrically connected electrode micro-wires. A plurality of patterned electrically isolated dummy micro-dots are located between adjacent electrodes and arranged to provide a substantially uniform optical density in the area. An unpatterned conductive layer is located in the area in electrical contact with the electrode micro-wires and dummy micro-dots.

CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

Reference is made to commonly-assigned, co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. ______ filed concurrently herewith, entitled “Micro-Wire Electrodes with Equi-Potential Dummy Micro-Wires” by Cok and to commonly-assigned, co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/032,213 filed Sep. 20, 2013 entitled “Micro-Wire Touch-Screen with Unpatterned Conductive Layer” by Burberry et al, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to touch screens having micro-wire electrodes, an unpatterned transparent conductor layer, and electrically isolated dummy structures.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Transparent conductors are widely used in the flat-panel display industry to form electrodes that are used to electrically switch light-emitting or light-transmitting properties of a display pixel, for example in liquid crystal or organic light-emitting diode displays. Transparent conductive electrodes are also used in touch screens in conjunction with displays. In such applications, the transparency and conductivity of the transparent electrodes are important attributes. In general, it is desired that transparent conductors have a high transparency (for example, greater than 90% in the visible spectrum) and a low electrical resistivity (for example, less than 10 ohms/square).

Transparent conductive metal oxides are well known in the display and touch-screen industries and have a number of disadvantages, including limited transparency and conductivity and a tendency to crack under mechanical or environmental stress. Typical prior-art conductive electrode materials include conductive metal oxides such as indium tin oxide (ITO) or very thin layers of metal, for example silver or aluminum or metal alloys including silver or aluminum. These materials are coated, for example, by sputtering or vapor deposition, and are patterned on display or touch-screen substrates, such as glass. For example, the use of transparent conductive oxides to form arrays of touch senses on one side of a substrate is taught in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2011/0099805 entitled “Method of Fabricating Capacitive Touch-Screen Panel”.

Transparent conductive metal oxides are increasingly expensive and relatively costly to deposit and pattern. Moreover, the substrate materials are limited by the electrode material deposition process (such as sputtering) and the current-carrying capacity of such electrodes is limited, thereby limiting the amount of power that is supplied to the pixel elements and the size of touch screens that employ such electrodes. Although thicker layers of metal oxides or metals increase conductivity, they also reduce the transparency of the electrodes.

Apparently transparent electrodes including very fine patterns of conductive elements, such as metal wires or conductive traces are known. For example, U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2011/0007011 teaches a capacitive touch screen with a mesh electrode, as do U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2010/0026664, U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2010/0328248, and U.S. Pat. No. 8,179,381, which are hereby incorporated in their entirety by reference. As disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 8,179,381, fine conductor patterns are made by one of several processes, including laser-cured masking, inkjet printing, gravure printing, micro-replication, and micro-contact printing. In particular, micro-replication is used to form micro-conductors formed in micro-replicated channels. The apparently transparent micro-wire electrodes include micro-wires between 0.5μ and 4μ wide and a transparency of between approximately 86% and 96%.

Conductive micro-wires are formed in micro-channels embossed in a substrate, for example as taught in CN102063951, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety. As discussed in CN102063951, a pattern of micro-channels are formed in a substrate using an embossing technique. Embossing methods are generally known in the prior art and typically include coating a curable liquid, such as a polymer, onto a rigid substrate. A pattern of micro-channels is embossed (impressed or imprinted) onto the polymer layer by a master having an inverted pattern of structures formed on its surface. The polymer is then cured. A conductive ink is coated over the substrate and into the micro-channels, the excess conductive ink between micro-channels is removed, for example by mechanical buffing, patterned chemical electrolysis, or patterned chemical corrosion. The conductive ink in the micro-channels is cured, for example by heating. In an alternative method described in CN102063951, a photosensitive layer, chemical plating, or sputtering is used to pattern conductors, for example using patterned radiation exposure or physical masks. Unwanted material (such as photosensitive resist) is removed, followed by electro-deposition of metallic ions in a bath.

Capacitive touch screen devices are constructed by locating drive electrodes near sense electrodes to form an electric field. In one prior-art design, the drive and sense electrodes are located on a common substrate with bridge electrical connections to prevent electrical shorts between the drive and sense electrodes where the drive electrodes cross over or under the sense electrodes. In another prior-art design, the drive and sense electrodes are located on either side of a dielectric layer. Referring to FIG. 31, a prior-art display and touch-screen apparatus 100 includes a display 110 with a corresponding touch screen 120 mounted with the display 110 so that information displayed on the display 110 can be viewed through the touch screen 120. Graphic elements displayed on the display 110 are selected, indicated, or manipulated by touching a corresponding location on the touch screen 120. The touch screen 120 includes a first transparent substrate 122 with first transparent electrodes 130 extending in the x dimension on the first transparent substrate 122 and a second transparent substrate 126 with second transparent electrodes 132 extending in the y dimension facing the x-dimension first transparent electrodes 130 on the second transparent substrate 126. A dielectric layer 124 is located between the first and second transparent substrates 122, 126 and first and second transparent electrodes 130, 132. Touch pad areas 128 are formed by the overlap of the first transparent electrodes 130 and the second transparent electrodes 132. When a voltage is applied across the first and second transparent electrodes 130, 132, electric fields are formed between them that are measurable to detect changes in capacitance due to the presence of a touch element, such as a finger or stylus.

A display controller 142 connected through electrical buss connections 136 controls the display 110 in cooperation with a touch-screen controller 140. The touch-screen controller 140 is connected through electrical buss connections 136 and wires 134 and controls the touch screen 120. The touch-screen controller 140 detects touches on the touch screen 120 by sequentially electrically energizing and testing the x-dimension first and y-dimension second transparent electrodes 130, 132.

Referring to FIG. 32 as well as FIG. 31, in another prior-art embodiment, the rectangular first and second transparent electrodes 130, 132 that include micro-wires 150 are arranged orthogonally in a micro-pattern 156 on first and second transparent substrates 122, 126 with intervening dielectric layer 124, forming touch screen 120 which, in combination with the display 110 forms the touch screen 120 and display apparatus 100.

As is known in the prior art, electromagnetic interference from the display 110 can interfere with the operation of the touch-screen 120. This problem can be ameliorated by providing a ground plane between the touch screen 120 and display 110. However, such a structure undesirably increases the thickness and decreases the transparency of the display and touch screen apparatus 100.

Alternatively, it has been recognized that shielding can be achieved by controlling the relative width of the drive and sense electrodes. For example U.S. Pat. No. 7,920,129 discloses a multi-touch capacitive touch-sense panel created using a substrate with column and row traces formed on either side of the substrate. To shield the column (sense) traces from the effects of capacitive coupling from a modulated V_(com) layer in an adjacent liquid crystal display (LCD) or any source of capacitive coupling, the row traces were widened to shield the column traces, and the row (drive) traces were placed closer to the LCD. In particular, the rows can be widened so that there is spacing of about 30 microns between adjacent row traces. In this manner, the row traces can serve the dual functions of driving the touch sense panel, and also the function of shielding the more sensitive column (sense) traces from the effects of capacitive coupling.

Shielding has also been achieved by using metal micro-wire sense electrodes in combination with transparent conductive drive electrodes. For example U.S. Pat. No. 8,279,187 discloses a multi-layer touch panel having an upper electrode layer having a plurality of composite electrodes including a plurality of metal or metal alloy micro-wire conductors with a cross-sectional dimension of less than 10 microns, a lower electrode layer having a plurality of (patterned) indium oxide-based electrodes, the upper electrodes and lower electrodes defining an electrode matrix having nodes where the upper and lower electrodes cross over. The upper electrode layer is disposed between the first layer and the lower electrode layer and a dielectric layer is disposed between the upper electrode layer and the lower electrode layer. As noted above, it is difficult, expensive, or impossible to meet conductivity requirements for larger touch-screens using patterned indium tin oxide electrodes.

In general, touch screens are intended to be invisible to a user. It is important, therefore, that any conductive structures in a touch screen be visually imperceptible. In prior-art designs, relatively transparent conductive electrodes made of transparent conductive oxides reduce electrode visibility. Nonetheless, such electrodes do absorb some light, having a transparency for example of 88% in the visible range and a slightly yellow appearance. Thus, electrode structures in a touch screen having transparent conductive oxides are visible to perceptive users. In particular, regular gaps between electrodes are visible as areas with increased transparency.

To reduce the visibility of gaps between electrodes in a touch screen, dummy structures are provided in the gaps. These dummy structures typically include conductive materials and structures similar to those found in the electrodes but are not electrically connected to the electrodes. Thus, the dummy structures provide optical uniformity in the touch screen by providing structures with an appearance similar to the electrodes but without any electrical function. Gaps between the dummy structures and the electrodes are typically so small (for example, a few microns) that the gaps are imperceptible to viewers. Referring to FIG. 33, a plurality of rectangular, spatially separated first transparent electrodes 130 are arranged in an array on a first transparent substrate 122. Each first transparent electrode 130 includes a plurality of electrically connected micro-wires 150. Dummy micro-wires 152 located in gaps 60 between the first transparent electrodes 150 are arranged in a similar way so that the dummy micro-wires 152 located in the gaps 60 between the first transparent electrodes 130 appear similar to the micro-wire electrodes 130.

U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2011/0248953 entitled “Touch Screen Panel” describes conductive dummy patterns between adjacent sensing cells in a touch screen panel. U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2011/0289771 entitled “Method for Producing Conductive Sheet and Method for Producing Touch Panel” describes unconnected dummy patterns formed near each side of a sensing region. U.S. Pat. No. 7,663,607 entitled “Multi-Point Touch Screen” describes dummy features disposed between driving lines and sensing lines to optically improve the visual appearance of the touch screen. The dummy features provide the touch screen with a more uniform appearance and are electrically isolated and positioned in the gaps between each of the lines. Although they can be patterned separately, the dummy features are typically patterned along with the lines and formed with the same conductive materials. The dummy features still produce some gaps but the gaps are much smaller than the gaps found between the lines.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

There remains a need for further improvements in the structure of a multi-electrode structure that reduces susceptibility to electromagnetic interference, reduces thickness and cost, improves sensitivity and efficiency, and provides optical uniformity.

In accordance with the present invention, a micro-wire multi-electrode structure having an area of substantially uniform optical density comprises:

-   -   a plurality of spatially separated patterned electrodes in an         electrode layer in the area, each electrode including a         plurality of patterned conductive electrically connected         electrode micro-wires;     -   a plurality of patterned electrically isolated dummy micro-dots         between adjacent electrodes, arranged to provide a substantially         uniform optical density in the area; and     -   an unpatterned conductive layer in the area, the unpatterned         conductive layer in electrical contact with the electrode         micro-wires and dummy micro-dots.

The present invention provides a micro-wire multi-electrode structure useful in capacitive touch screens having improved sensitivity, efficiency, consistency, optical uniformity, and reduced susceptibility to electromagnetic interference and reduced thickness and cost. The presence of an unpatterned conductive layer electrically connected to drive electrodes and drive micro-wires provides electromagnetic shielding to sense electrodes, thereby reducing electromagnetic interference. The integrated unpatterned conductive layer reduces device thickness by reducing the number of insulating layers, reducing conductive layer thickness, and improving transparency in comparison to a conventional shielding system. The presence of dummy structures improves optical uniformity without compromising the function of the unpatterned conductive layer.

The presence of the unpatterned conductive layer also increases capacitance between drive and sense electrodes, thereby reducing the voltage needed to sense changes in the capacitive field, for example due to touches, and improving efficiency.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The above and other features and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent when taken in conjunction with the following description and drawings wherein identical reference numerals have been used to designate identical features that are common to the figures, and wherein:

FIG. 1A is a plan view of an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 1B is a cross section of the embodiment of FIG. 1A taken along cross section line B of FIG. 1A;

FIG. 1C is a cross section of the embodiment of FIG. 1A taken along cross section line C of FIG. 1A;

FIG. 2A is a plan view of a micro-structure useful in understanding the present invention;

FIG. 2B is a plan view of an alternative micro-structure useful in understanding the present invention;

FIG. 3 is a plan view of another micro-structure useful in understanding the present invention;

FIG. 4 is a plan view of another embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 5 is a plan view of yet another embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 6 is a flow chart illustrating a method of the present invention;

FIG. 7A is a plan view of an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 7B is a cross section of the embodiment of FIG. 7A taken along cross section line B of FIG. 7A;

FIG. 7C is a cross section of the embodiment of FIG. 7A taken along cross section line C of FIG. 7A;

FIGS. 8-12 are plan views of various micro-structures useful in understanding the present invention;

FIG. 13 is a plan view of an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 14 is a plan view of another embodiment of the present invention;

FIGS. 15-26 are cross sections of various embodiments of the present invention;

FIG. 27 is a perspective of another embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 28 is a plan view of a micro-wire structure useful in an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 29 is a flow diagram illustrating the construction of an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 30 is a cross section of an experimental sample of an embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 31 is a perspective of a touch screen and display apparatus according to the prior art;

FIG. 32 is a plan view of micro-wire electrodes according to the prior art; and

FIG. 33 is a plan view of micro-wire electrodes and dummy micro-wires according to the prior art.

The Figures are not drawn to scale since the variation in size of various elements in the Figures is too great to permit depiction to scale.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

The present invention provides a micro-wire multi-electrode structure useful, for example, in touch-screen devices in combination with a display. The micro-wire multi-electrode structure reduces the effects of electromagnetic interference and improves touch-response sensitivity, efficiency, consistency, and optical uniformity over the extent of the touch screen.

Referring to FIG. 1A in a plan view and to FIGS. 1B and 1C in cross sections taken along cross section lines B and C, respectively, of FIG. 1A, an embodiment of a micro-wire multi-electrode structure 5 of the present invention has an area 31 of substantially uniform optical density that includes a plurality of spatially separated patterned electrodes 22 located in an electrode layer 20 in the area 31. Each electrode 22 includes a plurality of patterned conductive and electrically connected electrode micro-wires 24. The electrodes 22 are spatially separated by gaps 26. One or more patterned electrically conductive equi-potential dummy micro-wires 90 are located in the area 31 substantially along equi-potential lines between adjacent electrodes 22, for example in the gaps 26. Adjacent electrodes 22 are pairs of electrodes 22 between which there is no other electrode 22. The dummy micro-wires 90 are electrically isolated from the electrode micro-wires 24. An unpatterned conductive layer 30 in the area 31 is in electrical contact with the electrode micro-wires 24 and the dummy micro-wires 90. The percent of incident light transmitted through the gap 26 and the dummy micro-wires 90 is similar to the percent of incident light transmitted through the electrodes 22 and the electrode micro-wires 24, so that the area 31 has a substantially uniform optical density.

The area of the unpatterned conductive layer 30 is equal to or greater than the area 31 of uniform optical density and the unpatterned conductive layer 30 is not necessarily distinguished from the area 31 in the Figures. Generally, the unpatterned conductive layer 30 is illustrated in cross sections and the area 31 is indicated in the plan views.

The unpatterned conductive layer 30 in the area 31 can refer to the touch-sensitive portion of a layer of conductive material located over a substrate 10. The unpatterned conductive layer 30 is a layer of electrically conductive material that can extend beyond the area 31 and can be patterned outside of the area 31, for example around the periphery of a touch screen (such as in the bezel or buss areas of a touch screen), but is unpatterned within the area 31. The electrodes 22 can extend beyond the area 31 or the unpatterned conductive layer 30.

In an embodiment, the electrode micro-wires 24 form a mesh and typically have a width less than 10 microns and a pitch of hundreds or even more than a thousand microns. Since such relative sizes and spacing are difficult to illustrate in the Figures, the micro-structures (such as the electrode micro-wires 24) are typically shown much larger and closer together than is the case in a practical implementation. In an embodiment of the present invention, the micro-structures of the present invention, including the electrode micro-wires 24 and dummy micro-wires 90 are too small to be resolved by, or visible to, the unaided human visual system.

Optical uniformity, as used herein refers to optical uniformity as easily perceived by the unaided human visual system without special effort under typical display viewing conditions and is averaged over areas much larger than the individual micro-structures in the optically uniform area 31, for example areas of several square millimeters. Substantially uniform means that the area 31 appears uniform to the unaided human visual system. The area 31 can have less than 20%, 10%, 5%, 2%, or 1% variation over the area 31. The spatial distribution of the electrode micro-wires 22 and dummy micro-wires 90 in the area 31 can affect the optical uniformity of the area 31 so that, in an embodiment of the present invention, the area 31 has a substantially uniform spatial distribution of electrode micro-wires 22 and dummy micro-wires 90 in the area 31.

Although the present invention discloses an optically uniform area 31, such uniformity is not readily illustrated in the Figures and the optically uniform area 31 in the Figures is not necessarily illustrated as optically uniform. Furthermore, optical uniformity is taken over a two-dimensional area. Cross-sectional Figures represent only one dimension of the area 31 and are not, therefore, illustrative of optical uniformity.

The electrode micro-wires 24 are electrically connected within each electrode 22 but are not electrically connected to electrode micro-wires 24 of other electrodes 22. Thus, each electrode 22 is electrically isolated from any other electrode 22. Furthermore, the dummy micro-wires 90 are not electrically connected to any electrode micro-wires 24. In an embodiment, the dummy micro-wires 90 are formed in a common layer with the electrode micro-wires 24 or include one or more common materials with the electrode micro-wires 24. In another embodiment, the dummy micro-wires 90 and the electrode micro-wires 24 are formed from the same materials. In an embodiment, the dummy micro-wires 90 and the electrode micro-wires 24 are formed in a common step with common materials in a common layer and have a common thickness. In another embodiment, the dummy micro-wires 90 have a thickness that is less than the thickness of the electrode micro-wires 24.

Each dummy micro-wire 90 extends along an equi-potential line. When adjacent electrodes 22 are energized at different voltages, an electrical field exists between the electrodes 22. For example, two opposing, parallel conductors will create an electrical field having field lines that extend orthogonally from one conductor to the other (ignoring edge effects). Each point along each field line has an electrical potential. The dummy micro-wires 90 extend from field line to field line at positions of equal electrical potential. In the case of two opposing, parallel conductors and orthogonal field lines, the equi-potential lines will be lines parallel to the conductors. Thus, an equi-potential line is a set of connected points forming at least a portion of a line, curved or straight, that have a common potential when the micro-wires 24 of adjacent electrodes 22 are controlled to have different voltage potentials. Each dummy micro-wire 90 extends along an equi-potential line. Different dummy micro-wires 90 can extend along different equi-potential lines so that the different dummy micro-wires 90 can have different electrical potentials. Moreover, the dummy micro-wires 90 can extend over only a portion of an equi-potential line. Multiple, electrically isolated dummy micro-wires 90 can extend along a common, same equi-potential line (for example as a sequence of dashed lines). Electrically isolated dummy micro-wires 90 are micro-wires that are not electrically connected to any electrode micro-wires 24.

By substantially equi-potential is meant that the conductivity of the unpatterned conductive layer 30 is not changed so much that the electrodes 22 cannot effectively maintain different voltages when driven by a drive circuit or that the conductivity of the unpatterned conductive layer 30 is not changed so much that electrical fields generated by the electrodes 22 cannot be distinguished with a sense circuit (e.g. drive and sense circuits in touch-screen controller 140). Thus, the dummy micro-wires 90 provide optical density in the gap 26 without compromising the conductivity of the unpatterned conductive layer 30 by increasing the conductivity to an unacceptable level.

In a further embodiment of a micro-wire multi-electrode structure 5, the electrodes 22 are drive electrodes 22, the electrode layer 20 is a drive layer 20, the electrode micro-wires 24 are drive micro-wires 24, gaps 26 separating the drive electrodes 22 are drive gaps 26, and the area 31 is a touch-sensitive area 31.

In this embodiment, a plurality of spatially separated patterned sense electrodes 52 is located in a sense layer 50 in the touch-sensitive area 31. Each sense electrode 52 includes a plurality of patterned conductive electrically connected sense micro-wires 54. The sense electrodes 52 are separated by sense gaps 56 and a dielectric layer 40 is located between the drive electrodes 22 and the sense electrodes 52. Areas in which the drive electrodes 22 and the sense electrodes 52 overlap form touch-pad areas 128. The touch-pad areas 128 form capacitors whose capacitance changes can be measured to detect a touch.

In one embodiment, the dielectric layer 40 is a separate layer (e.g. as shown in FIG. 31 with dielectric layer 124), in another embodiment the dielectric layer 40 is a portion of another layer, for example a portion of the sense layer 50 as shown in FIGS. 1B and 1C. In an embodiment, a protective overcoat layer 70 is provided over the sense layer 50. A surface of the protective overcoat layer 70 provides a touch surface 11.

FIG. 1B is taken along the cross section line B of FIG. 1A where the drive micro-wires 24 overlap the sense micro-wires 54. To aid understanding, FIG. 1C is also provided to clarify an embodiment of the present invention. FIG. 1C is taken along the cross section line C of FIG. 1A where the drive micro-wires 24 overlap the drive micro-wires 24 and the sense micro-wires 54 overlap the drive micro-wires 54.

Although illustrated in FIGS. 1B and 1C with the drive layer 20 between the sense layer 50 and the substrate 10, in another embodiment, as discussed below, the sense layer 50 is located between the drive layer 20 and the substrate 10, or the sense layer 50 and the drive layer 20 are located on opposite sides of the substrate 10. In an embodiment of the present invention, and as illustrated in FIGS. 1B and 1C, the dummy micro-wires 90 are located in the drive layer 20.

Referring to FIG. 2A, in an embodiment a first dummy micro-wire 90A is located along a first equi-potential line and a second dummy micro-wire 90B is located along a second equi-potential line different from the first equi-potential line between electrodes 22 with electrode micro-wires 24. Referring to FIG. 2B, in other embodiments, separate multiple dummy micro-wires 90A are located along portions of a common equi-potential line or have a different pattern from other dummy micro-wires 90B. The dummy micro-wires 90 can form straight lines or straight line segments. The straight line segments can be connected at an angle (not shown).

Referring to FIG. 3, adjacent electrodes 22 having electrode micro-wires 24 are separated by the dummy micro-wires 90A in gap 26A. The dummy micro-wires 90A are curved and dummy micro-wires 90A at different equi-potentials have different shapes. The dummy micro-wires 90B in gap 26B between adjacent electrodes 22 have a different shape or pattern from the dummy micro-wires in gap 26A. Thus, in various embodiments of the present invention, the dummy micro-wires have different shapes or patterns within a gap or in different gaps so that first dummy micro-wires 90A are located between first adjacent electrodes 22 in a first pattern and second dummy micro-wires 90B are located between second adjacent electrodes 22 in a second pattern different from the first pattern. Alternatively, as shown in FIG. 1A, first dummy micro-wires 90 are located between first adjacent electrodes 22 in a first pattern and second dummy micro-wires 90 are located between second adjacent electrodes 22 in a second pattern that is the same as the first pattern.

Furthermore, the patterns of electrode micro-wires 24 can vary. Referring to FIG. 3, the plurality of spatially separated patterned electrodes 22 in the area 31 can include a first electrode 22 having electrically connected electrode micro-wires 24 forming a first pattern and a second electrode 22 having electrically connected electrode micro-wires 24 forming a second pattern different from the first pattern. As shown in FIG. 3, the center and left electrodes 22 are mirror images and the center and right electrodes 22 are different mirror images. Alternatively, the first and second electrode micro-wire patterns are the same pattern (e.g. as in FIG. 1A). In some embodiments, the plurality of spatially separated patterned electrodes 22 in the area 31 forms a regular array of electrodes 22.

Referring to FIG. 4 and also to FIGS. 1A and 1B, in a further embodiment of a micro-wire multi-electrode structure 5, additional dummy micro-wires 94 are provided. The additional dummy micro-wires 94 provide optical uniformity in the sense gaps 56 between sense electrodes 52 having sense micro-wires 54. The additional dummy micro-wires 94 complement the dummy micro-wires 90 in the drive gaps 26 between drive electrodes 22 having drive micro-wires 24. The additional dummy micro-wires 94 are not necessarily electrically connected to the unpatterned conductive layer 30 in the area 31, are therefore not necessarily located along equi-potential lines between the sense electrodes 52 and, in an embodiment, are located in the sense layer 50.

Referring next to FIG. 5, an embodiment of a micro-wire multi-electrode structure 5 includes a plurality of electrodes 22 having electrode micro-wires 24 formed in or on the substrate 10 in the area 31. The electrodes 22 are separated by gaps 26 having dummy micro-wires 90 arranged along equi-potential lines. The area 31 has an area edge 33 and includes an edge electrode 23 adjacent to the area edge 33. By adjacent is meant that no other electrode 22 is between the area edge 33 and the edge electrode 23. Edge dummy micro-wires 96 are located along equi-potential lines between the edge electrode 23 and the area edge 33 and are electrically disconnected from the edge electrode 23. Thus optical uniformity is preserved within the area 31 even if the edge electrode 23 is not at the area edge 33. In a further embodiment, an electrical wire 134 is located outside the area 31 and adjacent to the area edge 33. Edge dummy micro-wires 96 are located between the edge electrode 23 and the electrical wire 134. Electrical wires 134 are combined to form electrical busses 136. FIG. 5 only illustrates the drive electrodes 22 in the drive layer 20 and not the sense electrodes 52 in the sense layer 50. In an embodiment, the electrical wire 134 located outside the area 31 and adjacent to the area edge 33 is electrically connected to a sense electrode 52. In an embodiment, the electrical wire 134 is in the drive layer 20 (not shown in FIG. 5); in another embodiment the electrical wire 134 is in the sense layer 50 (not shown in FIG. 5).

In an embodiment of the present invention, a touch-screen device having a substantially uniform optical density in a touch-sensitive area 31 includes a plurality of spatially separated patterned drive electrodes 22 located in a drive layer 20 in the touch-sensitive area 31. Each drive electrode 22 includes a plurality of patterned conductive electrically connected drive micro-wires 24. A plurality of spatially separated patterned sense electrodes 52 in the sense layer 50 is located in the touch-sensitive area 31. Each sense electrode 52 includes a plurality of patterned conductive electrically connected sense micro-wires 54. A dielectric layer 40 is located between the drive electrodes 22 and the sense electrodes 52. One or more patterned electrically isolated equi-potential dummy micro-wires 90 are located in the touch-sensitive area 31 substantially along equi-potential lines between adjacent drive electrodes 22 and electrically disconnected from the adjacent drive electrodes 22, so that the touch-sensitive area 31 has a substantially uniform optical density. An unpatterned conductive layer 30 that is unpatterned in the touch-sensitive area 31 is in electrical contact with the drive micro-wires 24 and the dummy micro-wires 90. A controller is electrically connected to the drive and sense electrodes 22, 52 to control the drive and sense electrodes 22, 52.

Referring to the flow-diagram of FIG. 6, a method of making a micro-wire multi-electrode structure 5 having an area 31 of substantially uniform optical density includes providing in step 500 a plurality of spatially separated patterned electrodes 22 in an electrode layer 20 in the area 31. Each electrode 22 includes a plurality of patterned conductive electrically connected electrode micro-wires 24. One or more patterned electrically isolated dummy micro-structures are located in step 505 in the area 31. In this embodiment, the micro-structures include electrode micro-wires 24 and dummy micro-wires 90 located substantially along equi-potential lines between adjacent electrodes 22, so that the area 31 has a substantially uniform optical density. In step 510, an unpatterned conductive layer 30 is located in step 515 in the area 31. The unpatterned conductive layer 30 is in electrical contact with the electrode micro-wires 24 and dummy micro-wires 90.

Referring to FIG. 7A, in an alternative embodiment of the present invention, dummy micro-dots 92 are used in place of dummy micro-wires 90. The dummy micro-dots 92 are micro-structures that have negligible conductivity in any given direction, for example having a cross section in the plane of the electrode layer 20 that is a circle, a square, or other polygonal shape that has an effective aspect ratio of one. The dummy micro-dots 92 can have a thickness (depth) that is similar to a thickness (depth) of the electrode micro-wires 24. Alternatively, the dummy micro-dots 92 can have a thickness that is less than the thickness of the electrode micro-wires 22. In either case, for example, dummy micro-dots 92 that have a circular cross section are cylindrical.

Although the dummy micro-dots 92 have a negligible conductivity in any given direction, they do absorb or reflect light and can therefore provide a substantially uniform optical density in the area 31. A negligible conductivity in any given direction is a conductivity that is small enough that conductivity of the unpatterned conductive layer 30 is not changed so much that the electrodes 22 cannot effectively maintain different voltages when driven by a drive circuit or that the conductivity of the unpatterned conductive layer 30 is not changed so much that electrical fields generated by the electrodes 22 cannot be distinguished with a sense circuit (e.g. drive and sense circuits in touch-screen controller 140). Thus, the dummy micro-dots 92 provide optical density in the gap 26 without compromising the conductivity of the unpatterned conductive layer 30 by increasing the conductivity to an unacceptable level.

As shown in FIG. 7A in a plan view and in FIGS. 7B and 7C in cross sections taken along cross section lines B and C, respectively, of FIG. 7A, an embodiment of a micro-wire multi-electrode structure 5 of the present invention has an area 31 of substantially uniform optical density that includes a plurality of spatially separated patterned electrodes 22 located in an electrode layer 20 in the area 31. Each electrode 22 includes a plurality of patterned conductive and electrically connected electrode micro-wires 24. The electrodes 22 are spatially separated by gaps 26 and are arranged in a regular array. One or more patterned dummy micro-dots 92 are located in the area 31, for example in the gaps 26. Adjacent electrodes 22 are pairs of electrodes 22 between which there is no other electrode 22. The dummy micro-dots 92 are electrically isolated from the electrode micro-wires 24. An unpatterned conductive layer 30 in the area 31 is in electrical contact with the electrode micro-wires 24 and the dummy micro-dots 92. Light incident on the dummy micro-dots 92 is absorbed or reflected in an amount similar to the amount of light incident on the electrode micro-wires 24 that is absorbed or reflected, so that the area 31 has a substantially uniform optical density.

In various embodiments, the dummy micro-dots 92 are in a common layer with the electrode 22 or electrode micro-wires 24, are formed in a common step with the electrode micro-wires 24, include similar materials or are made of the same materials as the electrode micro-wires 24, or have a similar depth as the electrode micro-wires 24.

In a further embodiment of a micro-wire multi-electrode structure 5, the electrodes 22 are drive electrodes 22, the electrode layer 20 is a drive layer 20, the electrode micro-wires 24 are drive micro-wires 24, gaps 26 separating the drive electrodes 22 are drive gaps 26, and the area 31 is a touch-sensitive area 31. In an embodiment, the dummy micro-dots 92 are in the same drive layer 20 as the drive micro-wires 24.

In this embodiment, a plurality of spatially separated patterned sense electrodes 52 is located in the sense layer 50 in the touch-sensitive area 31. Each sense electrode 52 includes a plurality of patterned conductive electrically connected sense micro-wires 54. The sense electrodes 52 are separated by sense gaps 56 and a dielectric layer 40 is located between the drive electrodes 22 and the sense electrodes 52. Areas in which the drive electrodes 22 and the sense electrodes 52 overlap form touch-pad areas 128. The touch-pad areas 128 form capacitors whose capacitance changes can be measured to detect a touch.

In one embodiment, the dielectric layer 40 is a separate layer (e.g. as shown in FIG. 31 with dielectric layer 124), in another embodiment the dielectric layer 40 is a portion of another layer, for example a portion of the sense layer 50. In an embodiment, the protective overcoat layer 70 is provided over the sense layer 50. A surface of the protective overcoat layer 70 provides a touch surface 11.

FIG. 7B is taken along the cross section line B of FIG. 7A where the sense micro-wires 54 overlap the drive micro-wires 24. To aid understanding, FIG. 7C is also provided to clarify an embodiment of the present invention. FIG. 7C is taken along the cross section line C of FIG. 7A where the sense micro-wires 54 do not overlap the drive micro-wires 24 but are offset from them along the cross section.

Although illustrated in FIGS. 7B and 7C with the drive layer 20 between the sense layer 50 and the substrate 10, in another embodiment, as discussed below, the sense layer 50 is located between the drive layer 20 and the substrate 10, or the sense layer 50 and the drive layer 20 are located on opposite sides of the substrate 10. In an embodiment of the present invention, and as illustrated in FIGS. 7B and 7C, the dummy micro-dots 92 are located in the drive layer 20.

In an embodiment, the dummy micro-dots 92 are arranged in lines, arrays, or other regular arrangements. As shown in FIG. 7A, the dummy micro-dots 92 are located in lines that extend in a direction that is the same as the direction in which electrodes 22 extend. Referring to FIG. 8, the dummy micro-dots 92 located in the gaps 26 are arranged in lines that extend in a direction that is the same as the direction in which electrode micro-wires 24 in electrodes 22 extend. In an embodiment, the dummy micro-dots 92 are arranged in a regular array. Referring to FIG. 9, the dummy micro-dots 92 are located randomly or pseudo-randomly in the gaps 26 between the electrode micro-wires 24 in electrodes 22.

Referring to FIG. 10, the electrode micro-wires 24 form a pattern and the dummy micro-dots 92 form a similar pattern in the gap 26 between adjacent electrodes 22, in this case a grid pattern. As shown in FIG. 11, dummy micro-dots 92 in gap 26 between electrodes 22 having electrode micro-wires 24 are arranged in lines that extend in a direction of some of the electrode micro-wires 24 but not others.

Referring to FIG. 12, the arrangement of dummy micro-dots 92 in gaps 26 between electrodes 22 having electrode micro-wires 24 can be different between different pairs of adjacent electrodes in different gaps 26. As shown in FIG. 12, the dummy micro-dots 92A in gap 26A are arranged differently from the dummy micro-dots 92B in gap 26B. Thus, in an embodiment, first dummy micro-dots 92A are located between first adjacent electrodes in a first pattern and second dummy micro-dots are located between second adjacent electrodes in a second pattern different from the first pattern or that is the same as the first pattern.

Drive or sense electrodes 22, 52 can be formed in a variety of patterns. Electrodes can be rectangular and arranged in regular arrays. Drive electrodes 22 and sense electrodes 52 can be arranged orthogonally to each other. Alternatively, electrodes can be arranged using polar coordinates, in circles, or in other curvilinear patterns. Electrodes can have uniform spacing or widths. Alternatively, electrodes can have non-uniform spacing and variable widths.

Referring to FIG. 13 and also to FIGS. 7B and 7C, a micro-wire multi-electrode structure 5 further includes additional dummy micro-dots 95 located in the sense layer 50. As shown in FIG. 13, dummy micro-dots 92 in gaps 26 between drive electrodes 22 having electrode micro-wires 24 provide optical uniformity in the drive layer 20. Additional dummy micro-dots 95 in gaps 56 between sense electrodes 52 having sense micro-wires 54 provide optical uniformity in the sense layer 50 and over the area 31. In an embodiment, additional dummy micro-wires 94 are provided in the gaps 56 as shown in FIG. 4.

Referring next to FIG. 14, an embodiment of a micro-wire multi-electrode structure 5 includes a plurality of electrodes 22 having electrode micro-wires 24 formed in or on the substrate 10 in an area 31. The electrodes 22 are separated by gaps 26 having dummy micro-dots 92 in the gaps 26. The area 31 has an area edge 33 and includes an edge electrode 23 adjacent to the area edge 33. By adjacent is meant that no other electrode is between the area edge 33 and the edge electrode 23. Edge dummy micro-dots 98 are located between the area edge 33 and the edge electrode 23 and are electrically disconnected from the edge electrode 23. Thus optical uniformity is preserved within the area 31 even if the edge electrode 23 is not at the area edge 33. In a further embodiment, an electrical wire 134 is located outside the area 31 and adjacent to the area edge 33. Edge dummy micro-dots 98 are located between the edge electrode 23 and the electrical wire 134. Electrical wires 134 are combined to form electrical busses 136. FIG. 14 only illustrates the drive electrodes 22 in the drive layer 20 and not the sense electrodes 52 in the sense layer 50. In an embodiment, the electrical wire 134 located outside the area 31 and adjacent to the area edge 33 is electrically connected to the sense electrode 52. In an embodiment, the electrical wire 134 is in the drive layer 20 (not shown in FIG. 14); in another embodiment the electrical wire 134 is in the sense layer 50 (not shown in FIG. 14).

In an embodiment of the present invention, a touch-screen device having a substantially uniform optical density in a touch-sensitive area 31 includes a plurality of spatially separated patterned drive electrodes 22 located in a drive layer 20 in the touch-sensitive area 31. Each drive electrode 22 includes a plurality of patterned conductive electrically connected drive micro-wires 24. A plurality of spatially separated patterned sense electrodes 52 in the sense layer 50 is located in the touch-sensitive area 31. Each sense electrode 52 includes a plurality of patterned conductive electrically connected sense micro-wires 54. The dielectric layer 40 is located between the drive electrodes 22 and the sense electrodes 52. One or more patterned electrically isolated dummy micro-dots 92 are located in the touch-sensitive area 31 and electrically disconnected from the adjacent drive electrodes 22, so that the touch-sensitive area 31 has a substantially uniform optical density. The unpatterned conductive layer 30 that is unpatterned in the touch-sensitive area 31 is in electrical contact with the drive micro-wires 24 and the dummy micro-wires 90. The touch screen controller 140 is electrically connected to the drive and sense electrodes 22, 52 to control the drive and sense electrodes 22, 52.

In a method of the present invention, referring again to FIG. 6, a plurality of spatially separated patterned drive electrodes 22 are provided in step 500 in a drive layer 20 in the area 31, each drive electrode 22 including a plurality of patterned conductive electrically connected drive micro-wires 24. One or more patterned electrically isolated dummy micro-structures, in this case micro-dots 92, are located in the area 31 in step 505, so that the area 31 has a substantially uniform optical density. The unpatterned conductive layer 30 is located in the area 31 in step 510 in electrical contact with the drive micro-wires 24 and dummy micro-dots 92. In step 515, the dielectric layer 40 is located adjacent to the drive electrodes 22 and in step 520, a plurality of spatially separated patterned sense electrodes 52 are provided in the sense layer 50 in the area 31, each sense electrode 52 including a plurality of patterned conductive electrically connected sense micro-wires 54.

In various embodiments, the unpatterned conductive layer 30 is provided in various configurations with respect to the drive layer 20, the sense layer 50 and the substrate 10. In these embodiments, the dummy micro-wires 90 or dummy micro-dots 92 are formed in the same layer as the drive micro-wires 24 and are not shown separately.

Referring to FIG. 15, in cross section, to FIG. 27 in perspective, and to FIG. 28 in plan view, in an embodiment of the present invention the micro-wire multi-electrode structure 5 includes a plurality of patterned drive electrodes 22 in a touch-sensitive area 31, each drive electrode 22 including the plurality of patterned conductive electrically connected drive micro-wires 24. An unpatterned conductive layer 30 that is unpatterned in the touch-sensitive area 31 is in electrical contact with the drive electrodes 22. A plurality of patterned sense electrodes 52 in the touch-sensitive area 31, each sense electrode 52 including a plurality of patterned conductive electrically connected sense micro-wires 54 is located on a side of the dielectric layer 40 opposite the drive electrodes 22 so that the dielectric layer 40 is located between the drive electrodes 22 and the sense electrodes 52 and electrically insulates the drive micro-wires 24 from the sense electrodes 52. An optional protective overcoat layer 70 on the sense electrodes 52 protects the sense electrodes 52 from the environment, and in particular from touches by a finger or a stylus. FIG. 15 illustrates a cross section through a single drive electrode 22 and along a single sense micro-wire 54 of the sense electrode 52.

As is illustrated further in the embodiment of FIGS. 15 and 27, the drive electrodes 22, the unpatterned conductive layer 30, the dielectric layer 40, and the sense electrodes 52 are formed on the substrate 10 that can also serve as an element of the display 110, for example a display cover or substrate. Drive electrodes 22 are formed in the drive layer 20 and sense electrodes 52 are formed in the sense layer 50. Such drive and sense layers 20, 50 can, for example, include polymers such as curable polymers that are cured in various ways, such as by exposure to ultra-violet radiation or heat.

According to various embodiments of the present invention, FIGS. 16-30 illustrate touch-screen devices having various arrangements of the substrate 10, drive layer 20, unpatterned conductive layer 30, dielectric layer 40, and sense layer 50. Separate drive layers 20 or sense layers 50 are included in some embodiments and not in other embodiments. Drive micro-wires 24, dummy micro-wires 90, dummy micro-dots 92, and sense micro-wires 54 are formed in or on the various layers using a variety of construction methods. The protective overcoat layer 70 can optionally be provided on layers formed on either side of the substrate 10.

In the embodiment of FIGS. 15, 20, and 23, the unpatterned conductive layer 30 is between the drive electrodes 22 and the dielectric layer 40. The drive micro-wires 24 are formed in the separate drive layer 20. Referring to FIGS. 16, 18, 21, 22, 24, and 26 in an alternative arrangement according to various embodiments of the present invention, the unpatterned conductive layer 30 is not between the drive electrodes 22 and the dielectric layer 40 but is rather on a side of the drive electrodes 22 opposite the dielectric layer 40 or the sense electrodes 52 so that the drive electrodes 22 are between the unpatterned conductive layer 30 and the dielectric layer 40 or the sense electrodes 52. The drive micro-wires 24, dummy micro-wires 90 (not shown), or dummy micro-dots 92 (not shown) are formed in the dielectric layer 40. In yet another embodiment illustrated in FIGS. 17 and 19, the drive electrodes 22 are formed in the unpatterned conductive layer 30, so that the unpatterned conductive layer 30 serves as the drive layer 20 supporting the drive electrodes 22. In all three sets of arrangements, the sense micro-wires 54 are formed in the separate sense layer 50.

In various embodiments of the present invention, the drive electrodes 22 are adjacent to the substrate 10, as shown in FIGS. 15-20, 23, 25, and 27. By adjacent is meant that no other electrodes are between the drive electrodes 22 and the substrate 10. The drive electrodes 22 are therefore located between the substrate 10 and the dielectric layer 40. As illustrated in FIGS. 21, 24, and 26 in another embodiment, the sense electrodes 52 are adjacent to the substrate 10 so that no other electrodes are between the sense electrodes 52 and the substrate 10. The sense electrodes 52 are therefore located between the substrate 10 and the dielectric layer 40. In FIG. 24, the drive micro-wires 24 are formed in the separate drive layer 20 and the sense micro-wires 54 are formed in a separate sense layer 50. The unpatterned conductive layer 30 is located on a side of the drive electrodes 22 opposite the dielectric layer 40. In FIG. 21, the drive micro-wires 24 are formed in the dielectric layer 40 and the sense micro-wires 54 are formed in the separate sense layer 50. The unpatterned conductive layer 30 is located on the dielectric layer 40 on a side of the dielectric layer 40 opposite the sense electrodes 52.

In an embodiment illustrated in FIG. 22, the drive electrodes 22 and the sense electrodes 52 are on opposite sides of the substrate 10 so that the substrate 10 also serves as the dielectric layer 40. In this embodiment, as in the embodiment of FIG. 24, the drive micro-wires 24, dummy micro-wires 90, or dummy micro-dots 92 are formed in the separate drive layer 20 and the sense micro-wires 54 are formed in the separate sense layer 50. The unpatterned conductive layer 30 is located on a side of the drive electrodes 22 opposite the dielectric layer 40 (substrate 10).

In the embodiment of FIG. 26, the drive micro-wires 24 and dummy micro-wires 90 or dummy micro-dots 92 and the sense micro-wires 54 are embedded in opposite sides of the dielectric layer 40 formed on the substrate 10 adjacent to the sense micro-wires 54. The unpatterned conductive layer 30 is on a side of the drive micro-wires 24 opposite the dielectric layer 40.

Not all possible combinations and arrangements of layers are illustrated herein. Other arrangements that provide patterned micro-wire drive electrodes 22 electrically connected to an unpatterned conductive layer 30 on a side of the dielectric layer 40 opposite patterned micro-wire sense electrodes 52 are included within the present invention. In particular: either the drive electrodes 22 or the sense electrodes 52 can be independently arranged adjacent to the substrate 10; the unpatterned conductive layer 30 is located between the drive electrodes 22 and the dielectric layer 40, the drive electrodes 22 are located between the conductive layer and the dielectric layer 40, or the drive electrodes 22 are located at least partially in the unpatterned conductive layer 30; the drive micro-wires 24, dummy micro-wires 90, or dummy micro-dots 92 are formed in the separate drive layer 20, in the dielectric layer 40, in the unpatterned conductive layer 30, or in the substrate 10; or the sense electrodes 52 are located in a separate sense layer 50 or in the dielectric layer 40. Various arrangements of each of these layers can be combined with other layer arrangements. In general, the touch surface of the touch-screen device is adjacent to the sense electrode 52. For example, in FIGS. 21, 24, and 26 the touch surface 11 is a side of the substrate 10. In the embodiments of FIGS. 15-20, the touch surface 11 is opposite the substrate 10 rather than a substrate side.

There are at least three methods of providing the drive micro-wires 24, dummy micro-wires 90, dummy micro-dots 92, and sense micro-wires 54. In one method, the drive layer 20 or sense layer 50 is first formed and then the drive or sense micro-wires 24, 54, respectively, dummy micro-wires 90, or dummy micro-dots 92 are formed in micro-channels imprinted in the drive layer 20 or sense layer 50 to embed the drive or sense micro-wires 24, 54, dummy micro-wires 90, or dummy micro-dots 92 in the provided layer. In the Figures, the drive or sense micro-wires 24, 54, dummy micro-wires 90, or dummy micro-dots 92 are formed in micro-channels and are illustrated as filling the micro-channels. Thus, the micro-channels are not distinguished from the micro-wires in the illustrations. In a second method, the drive or sense micro-wires 24, 54, dummy micro-wires 90, or dummy micro-dots 92 are first formed, for example by printing or transfer onto the surface of substrate 10, and then any subsequent drive layer 20 or sense layer 50 is coated, deposited, or otherwise provided over the drive or sense micro-wires 24, 54, dummy micro-wires 90, or dummy micro-dots 92 to embed the drive or sense micro-wires 24, 54, dummy micro-wires 90, or dummy micro-dots 92 in the provided layer. In a third method, a pre-made layer (for example using either of the first or second method) is laminated onto an underlying layer, for example the surface of substrate 10. The pre-made layer can be, for example, either of the sense layer 50 with sense micro-wires 54 or the drive layer 20 with drive micro-wires 24, dummy micro-wires 90, or dummy micro-dots 92.

As shown in FIGS. 15, 20, and 22-24, in the first method the drive layer 20 is provided, for example as a curable drive layer 20 that is then imprinted with an imprinting stamp to form drive micro-channels that are then filled with conductive ink and cured to form the drive micro-wires 24, dummy micro-wires 90, or dummy micro-dots 92 in the drive micro-channels in the drive layer 20. As shown in FIG. 17, the unpatterned conductive layer 30, rather than the separate drive layer 20, is imprinted with drive micro-channels and having cured drive micro-wires 24. In the embodiment of FIG. 26, the drive micro-wires 24, dummy micro-wires 90, or dummy micro-dots 92 are formed in imprinted drive micro-channels in the dielectric layer 40. Similarly, the sense micro-wires 54 are formed in sense micro-channels formed in the sense layer 50, as shown in the embodiments of FIGS. 15-18, 21, 22, and 25. In FIG. 20, sense micro-channels are imprinted in the dielectric layer 40 rather than the separate sense layer 50 and sense micro-wires 54 are formed in the sense micro-channels.

Referring to FIG. 25, drive micro-wires 24 can extend through micro-channels formed in the drive layer 20 into the unpatterned conductive layer 30 to electrically connect the drive micro-wires 24, dummy micro-wires 90, or dummy micro-dots 92 to the unpatterned conductive layer 30. In such an embodiment, the unpatterned conductive layer 30 and the drive layer 20 can be coated together, for example with slot or extrusion coating, imprinted together with a stamp having protrusions as deep as or deeper than the depth of drive layer 20. The drive and unpatterned conductive layers 20, 30 are then cured together to form micro-channels that are filled with conductive ink and cured to form drive micro-wires 24, dummy micro-wires 90, or dummy micro-dots 92 in the drive layer 20 in electrical contact with the unpatterned conductive layer 30. The dielectric layer 40, sense layer 50 with sense micro-wires 54, and protective overcoat layer 70 are formed as described with respect to FIG. 15.

In the second method of first forming micro-wires and then coating over the micro-wires and as shown in the example of FIG. 16, the drive micro-wires 24, dummy micro-wires 90, or dummy micro-dots 92 are printed or otherwise transferred on the unpatterned conductive layer 30 and then the dielectric layer 40 is provided, for example by coating or laminating, over the drive micro-wires 24. In FIG. 18, the drive micro-wires 24 are printed or otherwise transferred on the unpatterned conductive layer 30 and then the drive layer 20 is provided, for example by coating, on the drive micro-wires 24, dummy micro-wires 90, or dummy micro-dots 92. In FIG. 19, the drive micro-wires 24, dummy micro-wires 90, or dummy micro-dots 92 are printed or otherwise transferred on the substrate 10 and then the unpatterned conductive layer 30 is provided. Also as shown in FIG. 19, the sense micro-wires 54 are printed or transferred on the dielectric layer 40; no separate sense layer 50 is formed, although the protective overcoat layer 70 (not shown) can be provided and can serve as the sense layer 50, if desired.

In all these various embodiments, the various layers can alternatively be pre-made and laminated together. Optically clear adhesives can be used as can conductive adhesives, if desired, for example to electrically connect the unpatterned conductive layer 30 to the drive micro-wires 24. In such an embodiment, the conductive adhesive is considered to be part of the unpatterned conductive layer 30.

In an embodiment of the present invention, the electrical resistance of the unpatterned conductive layer 30 is greater than the resistance of each of the drive electrodes 22. The resistance of the unpatterned conductive layer 30 was measured as the sheet resistance of the unpatterned conductive layer 30 independently of the drive micro-wires 24. The resistance of the drive electrodes 22 is the resistance measured along the length of the drive electrode 22.

In an embodiment, the unpatterned conductive layer 30 has a sheet resistance greater than 1 kΩ per square, greater than 10 kΩ per square, greater than 100 kΩ per square, greater than 1 MΩ per square, greater than 10 MΩ per square, greater than 100 MΩ per square, greater than 1 GΩ per square, greater than 10 GΩ per square, or greater than 100 GΩ per square. This lower limit in resistivity of the unpatterned conductive layer 30 is dependent in part on the frequency at which the drive electrodes 22 are driven and on the drive current and voltage characteristics and on the conductivity of the drive electrodes 22.

In another embodiment, the resistance of the unpatterned conductive layer 30 between any two drive electrodes 22 is at least five times greater, at least ten times greater, at least twenty times greater, at least fifty times greater, at least 100 times greater, at least 500 times greater, at least 1,000 times greater, at least 10,000, at least 100,000, or at least 1,000,000 times greater than the resistance of either of the two drive electrodes 22. For example, as illustrated in FIG. 28, the unpatterned conductive layer 30 is in electrical contact with the drive electrodes 22. The drive electrodes 22 are made up of drive micro-wires 24. The sense electrodes 52, made up of sense micro-wires 54, are separated from the drive electrodes 22 by the dielectric layer 40 (FIG. 27, not shown in the plan view of FIG. 28). The drive electrodes 22 are arranged in an array and separated by a gap 60. The sense electrodes 52 are arranged in an array orthogonal to the array of drive electrodes 22. Thus, in this example, the resistance of the unpatterned conductive layer 30 between drive electrodes 22 separated by the gap 60 is at least ten times greater than the resistance of any of the drive electrodes 22. The conductive material in the unpatterned conductive layer 30 can extend over the substrate 10 beyond the area 31 but outside the area 31 the conductive material can be, but is not necessarily, patterned.

In various embodiments of the present invention, the resistance of the unpatterned conductive layer 30 can be adjusted to compensate for any unwanted conductivity between adjacent drive electrodes 22. Although the dummy micro-wires 90 extend along equi-potential lines or the dummy micro-dots have a limited extent and an aspect ratio of approximately one, the dummy micro-wires 90 and dummy micro-dots 92 do have a physical width and therefore they do have some conductivity. If the dummy micro-wires 90 and dummy micro-dots 92 are made with common materials and in a common step with the driver micro-wires 24, the physical width of the dummy micro-wires 90 and dummy micro-dots 92 will slightly decrease the resistance between adjacent driver electrodes 22. This slight decrease can be compensated by a corresponding slight reduction in the conductivity of the unpatterned conductive layer 30, for example by changing the material composition of the unpatterned conductive layer 30 or by reducing the thickness of the unpatterned conductive layer 30.

In a further embodiment of the present invention, a driver, for example an integrated circuit, for driving the drive electrodes 22 provides voltage and current to the drive electrodes 22 in a desired drive waveform having a period and frequency. The frequency of the drive waveform limits the rate at which the capacitance between the drive and sense electrodes 22, 52 can be measured. Because the unpatterned conductive layer 30 is electrically connected to the drive electrode 22 and has a limited conductivity, the rate at which the drive electrode 22 and the unpatterned conductive layer 30 can be charged is likewise limited. A micro-wire electrode, such as the drive electrode 22, has gaps 26 between the micro-wires in the micro-wire electrode that, according to the present invention, are bridged with conductive material in the unpatterned conductive layer 30. Thus, the conductivity of the unpatterned conductive layer 30 will define, in combination with the open area defined by the geometry of the drive micro-wires 24 in the drive electrode 22, the rate at which the drive electrode 22 and the unpatterned conductive layer 30 can be charged or discharged. Therefore, the conductivity of the unpatterned conductive layer 30 and the open area define the time constant for charging or discharging the drive electrode 22 and the center of the open area in response to a voltage change as provided by the drive waveform. Therefore, according to the further embodiment of the present invention, the sheet resistance of the unpatterned conductive layer 30, including the dummy micro-wires 90 or dummy micro-dots 92, is sufficiently low that the time constant for charging the center of the open area between drive micro-wires 24 in the drive electrode 22 is less than the period of a drive waveform. In another embodiment, the time constant is substantially less than the period. By substantially less is meant at least 5% less, at least 10% less, at least 20% less, or at least 50% less.

In operation, a touch-screen controller (for example touch-screen controller 140 of FIG. 27) energizes one of the drive electrodes 22 and senses one of the sense electrode 52 to detect the capacitance, charge, or current or changes in capacitance, charge, or current of the area overlapped by the one drive electrode 22 and one sense electrode 52. Since the unpatterned conductive layer 30 electrically connects the drive electrodes 22, some current leaks from the driven drive electrode 22 to other drive electrodes 22. However, because the resistance of the unpatterned conductive layer 30 is high relative to the resistance of the drive electrodes 22, capacitance is still detected in the overlapped electrode area. Moreover, the presence of the unpatterned conductive layer 30 inhibits electromagnetic interference from affecting the capacitance measure by the sense electrode 52, especially if the electromagnetic interference originates from a side of the unpatterned conductive layer 30 opposite the sense electrodes 52. Furthermore, the unpatterned conductive layer 30 assists in extending the electrical field produced by driving the drive micro-wires 24 in the one drive electrode 22 into the spaces between the drive micro-wires 24, thereby providing a more uniform field between the drive electrode 22 and the sense electrode 52. A more uniform field enables a more consistent and sensitive detection of capacitance changes due to the presence of perturbing elements such as a finger or a stylus at varying spatial locations. Furthermore, the presence of the unpatterned conductive layer 30 reduces the sensitivity of the touch-screen device to differences in alignment between the drive micro-wires 24 of the drive electrodes 22 and the sense micro-wires 54 of the sense electrodes 52.

In comparison to other prior-art solutions using a separate ground plane beneath drive electrodes to reduce the effect of electro-magnetic radiation, for example from a display located beneath the touch screen, the present invention provides a thinner touch-screen and display structure. Moreover, the use of dummy micro-wires 90 or dummy micro-dots 92 provides optical uniformity over the touch-screen area 31.

If prior-art dummy micro-wires 152, for example those illustrated in FIG. 33 having a typical arrangement corresponding to the arrangement of the electrode micro-wires 150, are used in combination with the unpatterned conductive layer 30 of the present invention, the unpatterned conductive layer 30 and the prior-art dummy micro-wires 152 will electrically short the separate drive electrodes 22 together so that they cannot function. Furthermore, the pitch of the electrode micro-wires 24 anticipated in practical applications is so large that electromagnetic interference can readily pass through the electrode micro-wires 24 or prior-art dummy micro-wires 152 in the absence of the unpatterned conductive layer 30. Hence, prior-art dummy micro-wire arrangements cannot be used with the unpatterned conductive layer 30 of the present invention without destroying the functionality of the unpatterned conductive layer 30 and the electrodes 22.

Referring again to FIG. 6, a method of the present invention includes providing a plurality of patterned drive electrodes 22, for example on the substrate 10, each drive electrode 22 including a plurality of patterned conductive electrically connected micro-wires 24 and any dummy micro-wires 90 or dummy micro-dots 92 at the same time in simultaneous steps 500 and 505. The unpatterned conductive layer 30 is located in electrical contact with the drive electrodes 22 in step 510. The dielectric layer 40 is located adjacent to the unpatterned conductive layer 30 in step 515. A plurality of patterned sense electrodes 52, each sense electrode 52 including a plurality of patterned conductive electrically connected micro-wires 54 is located over the dielectric layer 40 so that the dielectric layer 40 is located between the drive electrodes 22 and the sense electrodes 52 in step 520.

A variety of techniques are usable to construct a touch screen device of the present invention. In various embodiments, the patterned drive electrodes 22 are formed in a layer, such as drive layer 20, unpatterned conductive layer 30, or dielectric layer 40, printed or transferred onto a layer, such as the substrate 10, unpatterned conductive layer 30, or dielectric layer 40, or laminated on the substrate 10 or other layer on the substrate 10. In other embodiments, the unpatterned conductive layer 30 is laminated, coated, formed by evaporation, sputtering, or chemical vapor deposition, or formed by atomic layer deposition on the drive electrodes 22 or drive layer 20. The dielectric layer 40 is laminated, coated, formed by evaporation, sputtering, or chemical vapor deposition, or formed by atomic layer deposition on the unpatterned conductive layer 30. The patterned sense electrodes 52 are formed in a layer, such as sense layer 50 or dielectric layer 40, printed or transferred onto a layer, such as the substrate 10 or dielectric layer 40, or laminated on the substrate 10 or other layer on the substrate 10.

In an embodiment, unpatterned conductive layer 30 or dielectric layer 40 is deposited by sputtering or deposition and patterned outside the touch-sensitive area 31 either with masks or by photolithographic processes. In an embodiment, conductive material is only deposited in the touch-sensitive area 31. Alternatively, conductive material is deposited over the entire substrate 10 and removed as needed, for example in peripheral regions of the touch screen outside the touch-sensitive area 31. In another embodiment, atomic layer deposition methods are used to form a transparent conductive layer, for example a patterned aluminum zinc oxide layer using methods known in the art. Patterning outside the touch-sensitive area 31 is accomplished, for example, by masking the deposition, using patterned deposition inhibitors, or by photolithographic processes.

Alternatively or in addition, referring to FIG. 29, the substrate 10 is provided in step 200, together with imprinting stamps in step 205. The drive layer 20 is provided on the substrate 10, for example by coating in step 210. The patterned drive electrodes 22 are formed by imprinting the drive layer 20 with an imprinting stamp to form micro-channels in step 215, curing the drive layer 20 to form drive micro-channels in step 220 that are filled with conductive ink in step 230. The conductive ink is cured in step 235 to form drive micro-wires 24, dummy micro-wires 90, or dummy micro-dots 92. The unpatterned conductive layer 30 is coated over the drive micro-wires 24, dummy micro-wires 90, or dummy micro-dots 92 in step 300 and the dielectric layer 40 is coated over the unpatterned conductive layer 30 in step 305. The unpatterned conductive layer 30 is provided on the drive layer 20, for example by coating in step 300. The dielectric layer 40 is coated over the unpatterned conductive layer 30 in step 305 and the sense layer 50 in step 310. Alternatively, the separate dielectric layer 40 is not coated and the sensor layer 50 also serves as the dielectric layer (as shown for example in FIG. 1A). The patterned sense electrodes 52 are formed by imprinting the sense layer 50 with an imprinting stamp to form micro-channels in step 315, the sense layer 50 is cured to form sense micro-channels in step 320, and the sense micro-channels are filled with conductive ink in step 330. The conductive ink is cured in step 335 to form sense micro-wires 54. The protective overcoat layer 70 is optionally coated in step 400.

In other embodiments, imprinting methods are used to imprint drive micro-channels in the dielectric layer 40 (as shown in FIG. 21) or in the unpatterned conductive layer 30 (as shown in FIG. 18). Similarly, in other embodiments imprinting methods are used to imprint sense micro-channels in the dielectric layer 40 (as shown in FIG. 20). Likewise, the order of construction of the drive layer 20 and the sense layer 50 can be reversed.

Printing methods are usable in other embodiments of the present invention. A conductive ink is printable, for example with a flexographic plate, on a substrate 10 or other layer and cured to form micro-wires. Alternatively, a pattern of micro-wires is transferrable to the substrate 10 or other layer. For example, in FIGS. 16 and 18, drive micro-wires are printed or transferred onto the unpatterned conductive layer 30. Referring to FIG. 17, drive micro-wires 24, dummy micro-wires 90, or dummy micro-dots 92 are printed on or transferred to the substrate 10 and then coated with unpatterned conductive layer 30. Likewise, as shown in FIG. 23, the sense electrodes 52 are printed on or transferred to the dielectric layer 40 and then coated with the sense layer 50.

In an alternative embodiment, micro-wires are formed by coating a flexographic substrate having a raised pattern corresponding to a desired micro-wire pattern with a conductive ink. The flexographic substrate is brought into contact with a layer surface to print the conductive ink onto the layer surface. In an optional step, the conductive ink is dried. Flexographic substrates are known in the flexographic printing arts.

In yet another embodiment, layer structures are laminated to another layer. Referring to FIG. 15, for example, the drive layer 20 is made as a separate construction (for example as a layer of PET) including drive micro-wires 24, dummy micro-wires 90, or dummy micro-dots 92 and then laminated with an adhesive to substrate 10. Sense layer 50 is made and similarly laminated. The unpatterned conductive layer 30 or dielectric layer 40 can be laminated onto their respective layers, together or separately. In another embodiment, a layer structure is formed on a temporary substrate with a temporary adhesive on a first side, the layer structure is permanently adhered to the substrate 10 or layer formed on the substrate 10 on a second side, and then the temporary substrate is removed from the first side, for example by peeling.

In various embodiments, the unpatterned conductive layer 30 is laminated, coated, or deposited on the drive electrodes 22. In an embodiment, atomic layer deposition is used to form the unpatterned conductive layer 30. In other embodiments, the dielectric layer 40 is laminated, coated, or deposited on the drive electrodes 22 or sense electrodes 52.

Dielectric layer 40 can be any of many known dielectric materials included polymers or oxides and are deposited or formed in any of a variety of known ways, including pattern-wise inkjet deposition, sputter or coating through a mask or blanket coated and patterned using known photo-lithographic methods. Such known photo-lithographic technology can include a photo-sensitive material that is optically patterned through a mask to cure the photo-sensitive material and removal of uncured material.

In an embodiment, unpatterned conductive layer 30 is transparent and includes one or more of a variety of transparent conductive materials, for example organic conductive polymers such as Poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) (PEDOT), Poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) PEDOT: poly(styrene sulfonate) PSS, Poly(4,4-dioctylcyclopentadithiophene), and Polypyrrole (PPy), long-chain aliphatic amines (optionally ethoxylated) and amides, quaternary ammonium salts (such as, behentrimonium chloride or cocamidopropyl betaine), esters of phosphoric acid, polyethylene glycol esters, or polyols, polyaniline nanofibers, carbon nanotubes, graphene, metals such as silver nanowires, and inorganic conductive oxides such as ITO, SnO₂, In₂O₃, ZnO, Aluminum-doped zinc oxide (AZO), CdO, Ga₂O₃, V₂O₅. Deposition methods for conductive materials can include solvent or aqueous coating, printing by for example inkjet, gravure, offset litho, flexographic, or electro-photographic, lamination, evaporation, chemical vapor deposition (CVD), sputtering, atomic-layer deposition (ALD) or spatial-atomic-layer deposition (SALD).

In another embodiment, unpatterned conductive layer 30 is an ionic conductor, a solid ionic conductor, an electrolyte, a solid electrolyte, or a conductive gel, as are known in the art.

In an embodiment, the unpatterned conductive layer 30 has a thickness less than or equal to 50 nm, 100 nm, 200 nm, 500 nm, or 1 micron. In other embodiments, the unpatterned conductive layer 30 has a thickness less than or equal to 10 microns, 100 microns, 200 microns, 500 microns, or 1 mm.

According to various embodiments of the present invention, the substrate 10 is any material on which a layer is formed. The substrate 10 is a rigid or a flexible substrate made of, for example, a glass, metal, plastic, or polymer material, can be transparent, and can have opposing substantially parallel and extensive surfaces. Substrates 10 can include a dielectric material useful for capacitive touch screens and can have a wide variety of thicknesses, for example 10 microns, 50 microns, 100 microns, 1 mm, or more. In various embodiments of the present invention, substrates 10 are provided as a separate structure or are coated on another underlying substrate, for example by coating a polymer substrate layer on an underlying glass substrate.

In various embodiments substrate 10 is an element of other devices, for example the cover or substrate of a display or a substrate, cover, or dielectric layer of a touch screen. In an embodiment, the substrate 10 of the present invention is large enough for a user to directly interact therewith, for example using an implement such as a stylus or using a finger or hand. Methods are known in the art for providing suitable surfaces on which to coat or otherwise form layers. In a useful embodiment, the substrate 10 is substantially transparent, for example having a transparency of greater than 90%, 80% 70% or 50% in the visible range of electromagnetic radiation.

Electrically conductive micro-wires and methods of the present invention are useful for making electrical conductors and busses for transparent micro-wire electrodes, dummy micro-wires 90, or dummy micro-dots 92 and electrical conductors in general, for example as used in electrical busses. A variety of micro-wire patterns are used and the present invention is not limited to any one pattern. Micro-wires can be spaced apart, form separate electrical conductors, or intersect to form a mesh electrical conductor on, in, or above the substrate 10. Micro-channels can be identical or have different sizes, aspect ratios, or shapes. Similarly, micro-wires can be identical or have different sizes, aspect ratios, or shapes. Micro-wires can be straight or curved.

A micro-channel is a groove, trench, or channel formed on or in a layer extending from the surface of the layer and having a cross-sectional width for example less than 20 microns, 10 microns, 5 microns, 4 microns, 3 microns, 2 microns, 1 micron, or 0.5 microns, or less. In an embodiment, the cross-sectional depth of a micro-channel is comparable to its width. Micro-channels can have a rectangular cross section. Other cross-sectional shapes, for example trapezoids, are known and are included in the present invention. The width or depth of a layer is measured in cross section. Micro-channels are not distinguished in the Figures from the micro-wires.

Imprinted layers useful in the present invention can include a cured polymer material with cross-linking agents that are sensitive to heat or radiation, for example infra-red, visible light, or ultra-violet radiation. The polymer material is a curable material applied in a liquid form that hardens when the cross-linking agents are activated. When a molding device, such as an imprinting stamp having an inverse micro-channel structure is applied to liquid curable material and the cross-linking agents in the curable material are activated, the liquid curable material in the curable layer is hardened into a cured layer. The liquid curable materials can include a surfactant to assist in controlling coating. Materials, tools, and methods are known for embossing coated liquid curable materials to form cured layers.

A cured layer is a layer of curable material that has been cured. For example, a cured layer is formed of a curable material coated or otherwise deposited on a layer surface to form a curable layer and then cured to form the cured layer. The coated curable material is considered herein to be a curable layer before it is cured and cured layer after it is cured. Similarly, a cured electrical conductor is an electrical conductor formed by locating a curable material in micro-channel and curing the curable material to form a micro-wire in a micro-channel. As used herein, curing refers to changing the properties of a material by processing the material in some fashion, for example by heating, drying, irradiating the material, or exposing the material to a chemical, energetic particles, gases, or liquids.

The curable layer is deposited as a single layer in a single step using coating methods known in the art, such as curtain coating. In an alternative embodiment, the curable layer is deposited as multiple sub-layers using multi-layer deposition methods known in the art, such as multi-layer slot coating, repeated curtain coatings, or multi-layer extrusion coating. In yet another embodiment, the curable layer includes multiple sub-layers formed in different, separate steps, for example with a multi-layer extrusion, curtain coating, or slot coating machine as is known in the coating arts.

Curable inks useful in the present invention are known and can include conductive inks having electrically conductive nano-particles, such as silver nano-particles. In an embodiment, the electrically conductive nano-particles are metallic or have an electrically conductive shell. The electrically conductive nano-particles can be silver, can be a silver alloy, or can include silver. In various embodiments, cured inks can include metal particles, for example nano-particles. The metal particles are sintered to form a metallic electrical conductor. The metal nano-particles are silver or a silver alloy or other metals, such as tin, tantalum, titanium, gold, copper, or aluminum, or alloys thereof. Cured inks can include light-absorbing materials such as carbon black, a dye, or a pigment.

Curable inks provided in a liquid form are deposited or located in drive or sense micro-channels and cured, for example by heating or exposure to radiation such as infra-red light, visible light, or ultra-violet radiation. The curable ink hardens to form the cured ink that makes up drive or sense micro-wires 24, 54, dummy micro-wires 90, or dummy micro-dots 92. For example, a curable conductive ink with conductive nano-particles are located within drive or sense micro-channels and cured by heating or sintering to agglomerate or weld the nano-particles together, thereby forming an electrically conductive drive or sense micro-wire 24, 54. Materials, tools, and methods are known for coating liquid curable inks to form micro-wires.

In an embodiment, a curable ink can include conductive nano-particles in a liquid carrier (for example an aqueous solution including surfactants that reduce flocculation of metal particles, humectants, thickeners, adhesives or other active chemicals). The liquid carrier is located in micro-channels and heated or dried to remove liquid carrier or treated with hydrochloric acid, leaving a porous assemblage of conductive particles that are agglomerated or sintered to form a porous electrical conductor in a layer. Thus, in an embodiment, curable inks are processed to change their material compositions, for example conductive particles in a liquid carrier are not electrically conductive but after processing form an assemblage that is electrically conductive.

Once deposited, the conductive inks are cured, for example by heating. The curing process drives out the liquid carrier and sinters the metal particles to form a metallic electrical conductor. Conductive inks are known in the art and are commercially available. In any of these cases, conductive inks or other conducting materials are conductive after they are cured and any needed processing completed. Deposited materials are not necessarily electrically conductive before patterning or before curing. As used herein, a conductive ink is a material that is electrically conductive after any final processing is completed and the conductive ink is not necessarily conductive at any other point in the micro-wire formation process.

In various embodiments of the present invention, micro-channels or micro-wires have a width less than or equal to 10 microns, 5 microns, 4 microns, 3 microns, 2 microns, or 1 micron. In an example and non-limiting embodiment of the present invention, each micro-wire is from 10 to 15 microns wide, from 5 to 10 microns wide, or from 5 microns to one micron wide. In some embodiments, micro-wires can fill micro-channels; in other embodiments micro-wires do not fill micro-channels. In an embodiment, the micro-wires are solid; in another embodiment, the micro-wires are porous.

Micro-wires can be metal, for example silver, gold, aluminum, nickel, tungsten, titanium, tin, or copper or various metal alloys including, for example silver, gold, aluminum, nickel, tungsten, titanium, tin, or copper. Micro-wires can include a thin metal layer composed of highly conductive metals such as gold, silver, copper, or aluminum. Other conductive metals or materials are usable. Alternatively, micro-wires can include cured or sintered metal particles such as nickel, tungsten, silver, gold, titanium, or tin or alloys such as nickel, tungsten, silver, gold, titanium, or tin. Conductive inks are used to form micro-wires with pattern-wise deposition or pattern-wise formation followed by curing steps. Other materials or methods for forming micro-wires, such as curable ink powders including metallic nano-particles, are employed and are included in the present invention.

Electrically conductive micro-wires of the present invention are operable by electrically connecting micro-wires through connection pads and electrical connectors to electrical circuits that provide electrical current to micro-wires and can control the electrical behavior of micro-wires. Electrically conductive micro-wires of the present invention are useful, for example in touch screens such as projected-capacitive touch screens that use transparent micro-wire electrodes and in displays. Electrically conductive micro-wires can be located in areas other than display areas, for example in the perimeter of the display area of a touch screen, where the display area is the area through which a user views a display.

INVENTIVE EXAMPLE

Referring to FIG. 30, sense electrodes 52 including sense micro-wires 54 were prepared using a standard lithographic process. Microposit 1813 photoresist was spin-coated onto a 1000 Å thermally deposited aluminum layer coated on a 2.5 inch by 2.5 inch square 4 mil PET support. The photoresist was exposed to UV light through a chrome-on-quartz mask, developed, rinsed and dried. The film was then etched in PAN etch leaving a positive image having 10 μm wide aluminum micro-wires consisting of connected open right-angle-diamond electrodes, 1600 μm on diagonal. The periodic width of the sense electrodes 52 was 6.42 mm separated by 400 micron breaks in the sense micro-wires 54 at intersections between sense electrodes 52. The sense electrodes 52 were terminated with conductive rectangular pads to enable simple resistance measurements end-to-end. The pads at one end of the sense electrodes 52 also had conductive buss lines leading to additional pads at the edge of the support (dielectric layer 40) to enable conventional 1 mm pitch edge connection with electrical test fixtures. The photoresist was removed with acetone and methanol baths and dried with nitrogen. Sense electrode 52 resistance was measured to be on the order of 450Ω from end-to-end and essentially infinite between nearest neighbor electrodes.

Drive electrodes 22 were prepared as were the sense electrodes 52, on a separate 4 mil PET support (substrate 10), and with the final addition of a transparent unpatterned conductive layer 30 formed on the lithographically patterned micro-wires 24 by spin coating a solution of PEDOT/PSS at 3000 rpm and drying on a hotplate for 2 minutes at 110° C. Sheet resistance of the dried PEDOT/PSS coating on a section of bare PET support using a four point probe was 8 MΩ/square. Drive electrode resistance was measured to be on the order of 450Ω from end-to-end with approximately 160 kΩ between nearest neighbor electrodes. Thus the ratio of shorting resistance to drive resistance in this inventive example was 356 to 1.

A functional touch-screen was fabricated from the prepared sense and drive electrodes 52, 22 by first, laminating a cover sheet of 4 mil PET (protective overcoat layer 70) on the exposed side of the sense electrodes 52 on dielectric layer 40 using optically clear adhesive (first optically clear adhesive layer 80), OCA (Adhesives Research, ARClear 8154 Optically Clear Unsupported Transfer Adhesive) to form a coversheet of the touch-screen example. Sense electrodes 52 were oriented 90 degrees with respect to drive electrodes 22 and offset such that the intersections of the diamonds were directly above the center of the diamonds of the drive electrodes 22. The uncoated side of the dielectric layer 40 was laminated to the exposed side of the unpatterned conductive layer 30 using the same optically clear adhesive as a second optically clear adhesive layer 82. The dielectric thus includes both the OCA (second optically clear adhesive layer 82) and the 4 mil PET dielectric layer 40.

Comparative Example

For the purpose of comparison, a control touch-screen representing an example of the prior art was prepared exactly as described above except the coating of PEDOT/PSS forming the unpatterned conductive layer 30 was eliminated in the comparative example.

Results

The measurement apparatus consisted of two translation stages which were used to move a mechanical, artificial finger incrementally across the sample. The weight of the finger was used to provide a constant touch force and the tip of the artificial finger consisted of a compliant, conductor loaded polymer foam mounted on the end of a conductive rod. All but one drive electrode 22 were held at ground while a voltage waveform consisting of a controlled burst of sine waves (either 100 kHz or 1 MHz) was applied to one of the drive electrodes 22. All of the sense electrodes 52 were held at ground and one was connected to a charge sensitive pre-amplifier (operational amplifier with capacitor feedback) which held the sense electrodes 52 at ground and output a voltage proportional to the input charge. The output voltage from the sensing amplifier was sampled periodically at 20 MHz. Digital processing was used to synchronously (with respect to the driven waveform) rectify the sampled signal and compute an average (in phase) voltage. By spatially stepping the artificial finger across the sample in a spatial matrix of locations, the sensed voltages are mapped as a function of the artificial finger location. By inference, the response of a single repetitive unit at a single location is the same as the response at any other location (except for boundaries). By measuring a known conventional capacitor with the same instrument, the voltage reading is converted to effective capacitance readings.

The mutual no-touch capacitance for the inventive example was 1.8 times higher than the comparative example at either 100 kHz or 1 MHz. This increase illustrates the effective field-spreading characteristic of the unpatterned conductive layer 30 in the inventive example at practical measurement frequencies and is usable to reduce the relative power consumption of a touch-sense controller resulting in improved system efficiency.

To test touch sensitivity, the examples were scanned with a 10.4 mm diameter artificial finger in a matrix pattern centered at an intersection of the active sense and drive electrodes 52, 22. In each case, far from the intersection, the capacitance was equivalent to the no-touch condition, as expected. Centered on the intersection the capacitance was less than the no-touch condition and the relative difference between the near node touch and no-touch reading was taken as a measure of the touch sensitivity.

p Touch-Sensitivity=−(C_(touch)−C_(no) _(—) _(touch))/C_(no) _(—) _(touch)

At 1 MHz the relative touch sensitivity was 42% for the inventive example and 50% for the comparative example. Thus, the touch signal in the inventive example was strong and differences between the inventive and comparative example small, demonstrating that the unpatterned conductive layer 30 has minimal effect on the touch sensitivity while increasing the capacitance. The observed difference in touch sensitivity can be due in part or entirely to imperfections of the alignment of sense and drive electrodes in each example.

To test the shielding properties, connections to the sense and drive electrodes 52, 22 were exchanged thus reversing the roles of the drive and sense electrodes 22, 52 and the artificial finger was scanned over the back-side of the examples. By symmetry this makes no difference for the comparative example but shows a reduction in touch sensitivity due to the shielding effects of the field-spreading unpatterned conductive layer 30 in the inventive example. Indeed, the results showed a factor of 3 reductions in touch sensitivity at 1 MHz and complete elimination of touch signal at 100 kHz for the inventive example. This reduction in frequency response is an illustration of the time constant for charging or discharging the open areas of the unpatterned conductive layer 30 in the drive electrode 22. Touch sensitivity of the comparative example was unaffected, as expected. Thus the field spreading unpatterned conductive layer 30 in the inventive example exhibited highly effective shielding at practical frequencies with no deleterious effects due to shorting between drive electrodes 22. Capacitance signal increased and little change in touch sensitivity was observed when driven and sensed in the intended configuration achieving a considerable improvement in overall system efficiency relative to the prior art example was demonstrated.

The optical uniformity of the dummy micro-wires 90 and dummy micro-dots 92 located between electrodes 20 were tested using image patterns displayed on a high-resolution monitor at standard viewing distances. Dummy micro-wires 90 arranged in lines along different equi-potential lines and dummy micro-wires 90 arranged in dashed lines along different equi-potential lines were both tested with electrode micro-wires arranged as shown in the drive layer 20 of FIG. 1A. When the length and number of dummy micro-wires 90 were chosen to match the electrode micro-wires 22, no visible difference in optical uniformity between the drive electrode 22 and the gap 26 was observed. Dummy micro-dots 92 were also tested. The dummy micro-dots were arranged in lines, in a regular two-dimensional array (e.g. as in FIG. 10), and in a random arrangement. In every case, no visible difference in optical uniformity between the drive electrode 22 and the gap 26 was observed.

Methods and devices for forming and providing substrates and coating substrates are known in the photo-lithographic arts. Likewise, tools for laying out electrodes, conductive traces, and connectors are known in the electronics industry as are methods for manufacturing such electronic system elements. Hardware controllers for controlling touch screens and displays and software for managing display and touch screen systems are well known. These tools and methods are usefully employed to design, implement, construct, and operate the present invention. Methods, tools, and devices for operating capacitive touch screens are used with the present invention.

In addition to the inventive and comparative examples described, a touch-screen structure having a PEDOT/PSS unpatterned conductive layer 30 was constructed using the imprinting techniques described and, in a separate sample, an unpatterned conductive layer 30 of AZO on etched drive micro-wires 24 was formed using atomic-layer deposition methods.

The present invention is useful in a wide variety of electronic devices. Such devices can include, for example, photovoltaic devices, OLED displays and lighting, LCD displays, plasma displays, inorganic LED displays and lighting, electrophoretic displays, electrowetting displays, dimming mirrors, smart windows, transparent radio antennae, transparent heaters and other touch-screen devices such as capacitive touch screen devices.

The invention has been described in detail with particular reference to certain embodiments thereof, but it will be understood that variations and modifications can be effected within the spirit and scope of the invention.

PARTS LIST

B cross section line C cross section line 5 micro-wire multi-electrode structure 10 substrate 11 touch surface 20 drive layer/electrode layer 22 drive electrode/electrode 23 edge electrode 24 drive micro-wire/micro-wire 26, 26A, 26B drive gap/gap 30 unpatterned conductive layer 31 area/touch-sensitive area 33 area edge 40 dielectric layer 50 sense layer 52 sense electrode 54 sense micro-wire 57 sense gap 60 gap 70 protective overcoat layer 80 first optically clear adhesive layer 92 second optically clear adhesive layer 90, 90A, 90B equi-potential dummy micro-wires 92, 92A, 92B dummy micro-dots 94 additional dummy micro-wires 95 additional dummy micro-dots 96 edge dummy micro-wires 98 edge dummy micro-dots 100 display and touch-screen apparatus 110 display Parts List cont'd 120 touch screen 122 first transparent substrate 124 dielectric layer 126 second transparent substrate 128 touch pad area 130 first transparent electrode 132 second transparent electrode 134 wires 136 electrical buss connections 140 touch-screen controller 142 display controller 150 micro-wire 152 dummy micro-wire 156 micro-pattern 200 provide substrate step 205 provide stamps step 210 provide drive layer step 215 imprint drive micro-channels step 220 cure drive micro-channels step 230 provide conductive ink in drive micro-channels step 235 cure conductive ink in drive micro-channels step 300 coat conductive layer step 305 coat dielectric layer step 310 provide sense layer step 315 imprint sense micro-channels step 320 cure sense micro-channels step 330 provide conductive ink in sense micro-channels step 335 cure conductive ink in sense micro-channels step 400 optional coat overcoat step Parts List cont'd 500 provide drive micro-wire electrode step 505 provide dummy micro-wire step 510 locate unpatterned conductive layer step 515 locate dielectric layer step 520 provide sense micro-wire electrode step 

1. A micro-wire multi-electrode structure having an area of substantially uniform optical density, comprising: a plurality of spatially separated patterned electrodes in an electrode layer in the area, each electrode including a plurality of patterned conductive electrically connected electrode micro-wires; a plurality of patterned electrically isolated dummy micro-dots between adjacent electrodes, arranged to provide a substantially uniform optical density in the area; and an unpatterned conductive layer in the area, the unpatterned conductive layer in electrical contact with the electrode micro-wires and dummy micro-dots.
 2. The micro-wire multi-electrode structure of claim 1, wherein the dummy micro-dots have a circular cross section.
 3. The micro-wire multi-electrode structure of claim 1, wherein the dummy micro-dots have a square or polygonal cross section.
 4. The micro-wire multi-electrode structure of claim 1, wherein the dummy micro-dots are located in a plurality of lines in the area between adjacent electrodes.
 5. The micro-wire multi-electrode structure of claim 4, wherein the electrodes extend in a direction and the lines in which the dummy micro-dots are located extend in the same direction.
 6. The micro-wire multi-electrode structure of claim 4, wherein at least some of the electrode micro-wires extend in a direction and the lines in which the dummy micro-dots are located extend in the same direction.
 7. The micro-wire multi-electrode structure of claim 1, wherein the electrode micro-wires form a pattern and the dummy micro-dots form a similar pattern in the area between adjacent electrodes.
 8. The micro-wire multi-electrode structure of claim 1, wherein the dummy micro-dots are located randomly or pseudo-randomly in the area between adjacent electrodes.
 9. The micro-wire multi-electrode structure of claim 1, wherein the electrodes are drive electrodes, the electrode layer is a drive layer, the electrode micro-wires are drive micro-wires, and the area is a touch-sensitive area and further including: a sense layer separate from the drive layer; a dielectric layer located between the drive layer and the sense layer; and a plurality of spatially separated patterned sense electrodes in the sense layer in the area, each sense electrode including a plurality of patterned conductive electrically connected sense micro-wires.
 10. The micro-wire multi-electrode structure of claim 9, wherein the dummy micro-dots are located in the drive layer.
 11. The micro-wire multi-electrode structure of claim 9, further including additional dummy micro-dots located in the sense layer.
 12. The micro-wire multi-electrode structure of claim 1, wherein the dummy micro-dots are located in the electrode layer.
 13. The micro-wire multi-electrode structure of claim 1, wherein the dummy micro-dots and the electrode micro-wires are the same material.
 14. The micro-wire multi-electrode structure of claim 1, wherein the area defines an edge and further including an edge electrode adjacent to the edge and edge dummy micro-dots located between the edge electrode and the edge of the area.
 15. The micro-wire multi-electrode structure of claim 14, further including an electrical wire electrically connected to electrodes and located adjacent to the edge of the area and outside the area and the edge dummy micro-dots are located between the electrodes and the electrical wire.
 16. The micro-wire multi-electrode structure of claim 1, wherein first dummy micro-dots are located between first adjacent electrodes in a first pattern and second dummy micro-dots are located between second adjacent electrodes in a second pattern different from the first pattern or that is the same as the first pattern.
 17. The micro-wire multi-electrode structure of claim 1, wherein the plurality of spatially separated patterned electrodes in the area form a regular array of electrodes.
 18. A touch-screen device having a touch-sensitive area of substantially uniform optical density, comprising: a plurality of spatially separated patterned drive electrodes in a drive layer in the touch-sensitive area, each drive electrode including a plurality of patterned conductive electrically connected drive micro-wires; a plurality of spatially separated patterned sense electrodes in a sense layer in the touch-sensitive area, each sense electrode including a plurality of patterned conductive electrically connected sense micro-wires; a dielectric layer located between the drive electrodes and the sense electrodes; one or more patterned electrically isolated dummy micro-dots randomly arranged in the touch-sensitive area located in drive layer between adjacent drive electrodes, and electrically disconnected from the adjacent drive electrodes, whereby the touch-sensitive area has a substantially uniform optical density; a conductive layer that is unpatterned in the touch-sensitive area, the conductive layer in electrical contact with the drive micro-wires and dummy micro-dots; and a controller electrically connected to the drive and sense electrodes for controlling the drive and sense electrodes.
 19. A method of making a micro-wire multi-electrode structure having an area of substantially uniform optical density, comprising: providing a plurality of spatially separated patterned electrodes in an electrode layer in the area, each electrode including a plurality of patterned conductive electrically connected electrode micro-wires; locating one or more patterned electrically isolated dummy micro-dots in the area, whereby the area has a substantially uniform optical density; and locating an unpatterned conductive layer in the area, the unpatterned conductive layer in electrical contact with the electrode micro-wires and dummy micro-dots. 